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Phoenix Suns star Devin Booker left Thursday night’s 121-94 loss to the San Antonio Spurs in the second quarter with right hip soreness and was ruled out for the rest of the game.

Suns head coach Jordan Ott told reporters that Booker ‘wasn’t moving great’ and the decision to sit him was made to ‘save himself from himself,’ per the Arizona Republic’s Duane Rankin.

Booker initially subbed out and went into the locker room with 5:24 left in the first quarter. He checked back in with 4:46 left in the second but then exited again two minutes later and returned to the locker room. His final stat-line for the night was five points and a rebound, shooting two-for-six from the floor in just nine minutes played.

An All-Star for the fifth time this season, Booker has caught the injury bug recently. He missed seven straight games with a sprained ankle that he originally suffered on Jan. 23 against the Atlanta Hawks. He returned to the Suns lineup on Feb. 7 and played in their next game on Feb. 11 before sitting out the team’s final game before the All-Star break against the Oklahoma City Thunder.

At All-Star Weekend, Booker participated in the three-point contest and was part of the USA Stars team, winning the first edition of the new USA vs. the World format All-Star Game.

The Suns are currently the seventh seed in the West, two games behind the Minnesota Timberwolves for sixth.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Cade Cunningham had said he likes playing in Madison Square Garden. He wasn’t lying.

Cunningham, the All-Star Detroit Pistons guard who is inserting himself into the conversation for NBA Most Valuable Player, was stellar in a 42-point, 13-assist, 8-rebound Pistons victory Thursday, Feb. 19. And with that 126-111 win, Detroit has won all three of its matchups against the Knicks this season, giving the Pistons a massive edge in potential seeding, should the Eastern Conference tighten up.

Jalen Brunson led the Knicks with 33 points, 8 assists and 6 rebounds, but New York struggled with its perimeter shots all night long.

Scroll below for a recap and highlights from Detroit’s impressive win over the Knicks Thursday night:

Pistons vs. Knicks highlights

End Q4: Pistons 126, Knicks 111

It was too much Cade Cunningham, too big a deficit on the glass and too few 3-pointers for the New York Knicks.

And with that, the Knicks have been swept in three regular season games by the No. 1-seeded Pistons (41-13), establishing a clear pattern of dominance over New York (35-21).

Cunningham played masterfully, dropping 42 points, 13 assists and 8 rebounds in a complete performance that should elevate his Most Valuable Player candidacy. Cunningham was deliberate and decisive in his movements, as Cunningham went 17-of-34 from the floor, including 5-of-11 from 3-point range.

The Knicks lost the rebounding battle 53-48 and shot just 8-of-35 from beyond the arc.

Jalen Brunson led New York with 33 points, 8 assists and 6 rebounds.

Pistons open biggest lead of game

The Knicks will lose this game if they don’t turn things around — and quickly. Detroit has opened up a 16-point lead, its biggest of the game, early in the fourth, leading to a Mike Brown timeout.

The Pistons have launched a 7-2 run to open the period.

End Q3: Pistons 90, Knicks 79

Cade Cunningham is on an absolute heater.

Cunningham, the Pistons’ All-Star guard and MVP candidate, has 35 points and 9 assists through three quarters, as he’s carrying Detroit to another solid game against the Knicks.

Cunningham has played excellently in his career against the Knicks and in Madison Square Garden and Thursday night has been no different. Cunningham, who dropped 11 points in the third, is in complete control, getting to his spots and not forcing anything. And, when New York sends extra pressure toward him, Cunningham is finding open teammates.

The Knicks, meanwhile, cooled off after a hot start to the period. Karl-Anthony Towns scored 12 points in the period, but New York has not been able to catch fire from deep. The Knicks are 4-of-25 (16%) from 3-point range.

Knicks cut it to 4 behind KAT attack

Clearly, New York adjusted at the half to get the ball in the hands of Karl-Anthony Towns, who has 8 points through the first two-and-a-half minutes of the third quarter. More importantly for the Knicks, they’ve shaved 6 points off the deficit and trail 62-58.

End Q2: Pistons 58, Knicks 48

The Pistons may be missing their top two centers, All-Star Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart (both to suspension), but they’re taking it to the Knicks.

Detroit closed the second quarter on a 7-0 run to open a 10-point lead in Madison Square Garden. The Knicks committed far too many turnovers and continued to struggle with their perimeter shooting in the second; New York has now missed 16 consecutive 3 pointers after it made its first of the game and is shooting just 6.3% from beyond the arc.

Cade Cunningham is continuing to control the offense for Detroit. He’s pushing the ball out in transition, finding his spots and dishing passes to his teammates to the tune of 24 points and 4 assists on 9-of-19 shooting.

New York, meanwhile, will need to scheme ways for Karl-Anthony Towns to become more active and engaged on offense. Towns is just 1-of-3 for 2 points with 5 rebounds. Towns is having a tough time finding his spots and at times has appeared disengaged.

Knicks 3-point shooting woes continue

New York made its first 3 pointer of the game, just seconds into the night. Since then, the Knicks have missed 14 consecutive 3s to shoot just 7.1% from beyond the arc, midway through the second quarter.

Karl-Anthony Towns with a quiet quarter

The Knicks big man has faced criticism over the past several weeks for a lack of intensity and intentional play. Towns had just 1 shot attempt in the first quarter, though he did look to distribute with two assists.

Still, for the Knicks to be elite, they will need more offensive production out of Towns.

End Q1: Pistons 28, Knicks 26

The Pistons battled back.

Detroit clamped up its defense and pestered New York into contested shots, which led to chances for Cade Cunningham to operate the offense in open space. Cunningham was the catalyst for Detroit, dropping a game-high 14 points in the first quarter on 5-of-11 shooting, including 3-of-5 from beyond the arc.

That was the difference in the first quarter, as Detroit was able to hit its open 3s, while the Knicks struggled to find bottom on theirs; the Pistons converted 3 pointers at 40%, while New York went just 1-of-8 (12.5%) in the period.

Jalen Brunson led the way for New York with 9 points.

Late in the first, new acquisition Jeremy Sochan made his Knicks debut, after the team signed him following his buyout with the Spurs.

Knicks vs. Pistons is underway

Jalen Brunson laced his first shot post-All-Star break, a stepback 3, and the Pistons missed their first four shots of the game as we’re underway in the Garden.

Detroit has started just 1-of-8 from the field, as New York has opened an early 9-2 lead just minutes into the game.

Knicks vs. Pistons starting lineups

Detroit Pistons

  • Cade Cunningham
  • Duncan Robinson
  • Ausar Thompson
  • Tobias Harris
  • Paul Reed

New York Knicks

  • Jalen Brunson
  • OG Anunoby
  • Mikal Bridges
  • Josh Hart
  • Karl-Anthony Towns

Knicks vs. Pistons injury report

(Updated 5:00 p.m. ET)

Knicks: OG Anunoby (right toenail avulsion; probable), Miles McBride (pelvic, core muscle surgery; out), Pacome Dadiet (G League assignment; questionable), Trey Jemison III (G League – two-way; questionable), Dillon Jones (G League – two-way; questionable), Kevin McCullar Jr. (G League – two-way; questionable)

Pistons: Jalen Duren (league suspension; out), Isaiah Stewart (league suspension; out), Bobi Klintman (G League assignment; out), Wendell Moore Jr. (G League – two-way; out)

How to watch Pistons vs. Knicks: TV channel, live stream

  • Start time: 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Location: Madison Square Garden (New York)
  • TV Channel: MSG Networks
  • Live stream: Amazon Prime

Pistons vs. Knicks odds

  • Spread: Knicks by 4.5 (-110)
  • Over/Under: 222.5 (O/U -110)
  • Moneyline: Knicks -185

Knicks next five games

  • Feb. 21 vs. Houston Rockets
  • Feb. 22 at Chicago Bulls
  • Feb. 24 at Cleveland Cavaliers
  • Feb. 27 at Milwaukee Bucks
  • March 1 vs. San Antonio Spurs

Pistons next five games

  • Feb. 21 at Chicago Bulls
  • Feb. 23 vs. San Antonio Spurs
  • Feb. 25 vs. Oklahoma City Thunder
  • Feb. 27 vs. Cleveland Cavaliers
  • March 1 at Orlando Magic
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Iran is rebuilding nuclear sites damaged in previous U.S. strikes and ‘preparing for war,’ despite engaging in talks with the Trump administration, according to a prominent Iranian opposition figure.

Alireza Jafarzadeh, deputy director of the Washington office of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), said newly released satellite images also prove the regime has accelerated its efforts to restore its ‘$2 trillion’ uranium enrichment capabilities.

‘The regime has clearly stepped up efforts to rebuild its uranium enrichment capabilities,’ Jafarzadeh told Fox News Digital. ‘It is preparing itself for a possible war by trying to preserve its nuclear weapons program and ensure its protection.’

‘That said, the ongoing rebuilding of Iran’s uranium enrichment capabilities is particularly alarming as the regime is now engaged in nuclear talks with the United States,’ he added.

New satellite images released by Earth intelligence monitor, Planet Labs, show reconstruction activity appears to be underway at the Isfahan complex.

Isfahan is one of three Iranian uranium enrichment plants targeted in the U.S. military operation known as ‘Midnight Hammer.’

The June 22 operation involved coordinated Air Force and Navy strikes on the Fordow, Natanz and Isfahan facilities.

Despite the damage, the satellite images show Iran has buried entrances to a tunnel complex at the site, according to Reuters.

Similar steps were reportedly taken at the Natanz facility, which houses two additional enrichment plants.

‘These efforts in Isfahan involve rebuilding its centrifuge program and other activities related to uranium enrichment,’ Jafarzadeh said.

The renewed movements come as Iran participated in talks with the U.S. in Geneva.

On Thursday, President Donald Trump warned that ‘bad things’ would happen if Iran did not make a deal.

While the talks were aimed at curbing Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief, Jafarzadeh argues that for the regime, talks would be nothing more than a tactical delay.

‘Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei agreed to the nuclear talks as it would give the regime crucial time to avoid or limit the consequences of confrontation with the West,’ he said.

Jafarzadeh also described the regime spending at least ‘$2 trillion’ on nuclear capabilities, which he said ‘is higher than the entire oil revenue generated since the regime came to power in Iran in 1979.’ 

‘Tehran is trying to salvage whatever has remained of its nuclear weapons program and quickly rebuild it,’ he said. ‘It has heavily invested in the nuclear weapons program as a key tool for the survival of the regime.’

Jafarzadeh is best known for publicly revealing the existence of Iran’s Natanz nuclear site in 2002, which led to inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency and intensified global scrutiny of Tehran’s nuclear ambitions.

‘The insistence of the Iranian regime during the nuclear talks on maintaining its uranium enrichment capabilities, while rebuilding its damaged sites, is a clear indication that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has no plans to abandon its nuclear weapons program,’ he said.

The National Council of Resistance of Iran, led by Maryam Rajavi, exposed for the first time the nuclear sites in Natanz, Arak, Fordow and more than 100 other sites and projects, Jafarzadeh said, ‘despite a massive crackdown by the regime on this movement.’

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

PHOENIX — Bruce Meyer hasn’t even been on the job 24 hours as the new chief of the MLB Players Association, and already he knows he has enemies.

There are some folks who wish he never got the job.

There are MLB executives who hate dealing with him.

There are agents who believe he favors only Scott Boras and other powerful agents.

There are players who think he can be condescending.

Meyer realizes he doesn’t have the personality of his predecessor, Tony Clark. He didn’t play 15 years in the major leagues. He didn’t even play in the minors. He didn’t play in high school.

But, man, can he ever litigate, and as long as he’s on the job, he vowed Thursday in a 30-minute interview to do everything possible for the players to get the best possible deal he can in the next collective bargaining agreement, and at the same time, help heal fractured relationships among agents and players in the game.

Meyer certainly wants to clear up any misperception that he provides preferential treatment to Boras, reiterating that Boras has no more influence on him than any other agent.

“I almost don’t want to dignify it,’’ Meyer said after speaking for 2½ hours to the Milwaukee Brewers. “Scott is an agent. He represents a lot of players. He has no more influence over the running of the union than any other agent. And the continuous suggestions to the contrary − which I believe are mostly originated by the league − are really just an attempt at divisiveness.

“Every agent is valuable to us. Every agent represents players who are our clients, our constituents. Every agent has our ear and we take it all very seriously.’’

It’s no different than the players, he said, trying to assure that the middle class and young class of players benefit just as much as the game’s wealthiest players in the next collective bargaining agreement. It was just two years ago when 21 players tried to lead a coup to have Meyer fired and replaced by attorney Harry Marino, who helped unionize the minor league players, and now he’s responsible for the well-being of 1,200 major-league players.

“You’re never going to have everybody agreeing with everyone,’’ Meyer said. “It just doesn’t happen. … You’re never going to get everybody on the same page, but you try and do the most you can.

“Disagreements are not just expected, they’re actually great. I mean we have very free and frank exchanges of views on all subjects in the past. That’s what these meetings are about. … We want and expect players to express their views, to express their disagreements, to talk it out, and we want to educate players.

“If at the end of the day we are not 100% on the same page, that’s unfortunate, but that’s to be expected. It doesn’t mean we can’t accomplish our goals.’’

Meyer, 64, who was unanimously voted by the union’s executive subcommittee and player representatives to succeed Clark, says while he is honored to be the union’s seventh executive director, he hates the circumstances. He was appointed Wednesday, about 48 hours after Clark was forced to resign after an internal investigation discovered an inappropriate relationship with his sister-in-law, a union employee based in their Scottsdale, Arizona, office.

“I feel for Tony, as we all do,’’ Meyer said. “I can’t say that anybody is celebrating anything at this point. But I’ve been representing players in really all of the (sports) unions for almost exactly 40 years. I’ve dedicated my career to protecting and advancing players rights. It’s something I’ve always been passionate about…

“So, if players believe that I am the best choice to help the union, that’s an honor, and that’s what I’m going to devote all my time and attention to.’’

Meyer’s appointment comes less than 10 months before the expiration of the CBA; a lockout is expected to begin on Dec. 1, with the league expected to seek a salary cap the union is vehemently opposed to. Meyer was going to be the lead negotiator once again, but with Clark gone, his duties will now expand.

Meyer, who was hired by former MLB union chief Don Fehr at the NHL players association, was able to break away Wednesday evening and attend the 2026 Playmakers Classic with Fanatics along with his wife, Jacqueline, and was warmly greeted by players and officials at the event. His phone buzzed all evening and in the morning with text messages and calls from everyone: classmates from middle school to fellow lawyers to Dan Halem, MLB deputy commissioner.

“(Halem) was very nice, very gracious, very classy,’’ Meyer said. “Despite occasional reports of the contrary, we have a good relationship, professional relationship, and I appreciate it.’’

Life will certainly be a whole lot busier for Meyer, who still plans to play the guitar as a stress relief, but his days of performing with buddies in a band may be over. He not only is picking up many of Clark’s duties, along with Matt Nussbaum, who was promoted to Meyer’s previous position, but he is now the new face of the union.

“My focus is going to continue to be on collective bargaining,’’ Meyer said. “I mean, our positions on bargaining aren’t going to be affected.’’

So, just in case anyone had any ideas that Meyer will turn soft in negotiations and suddenly be open to a salary cap, forget about it.

It’s not happening with Meyer in charge.

“We don’t believe in a system that’s basically a zero-sum game,’’ Meyer said, “that says, ‘If we pay you, we got to take that out of the pocket of another player.’ That’s how the other (salary-cap) systems work. … What happens is the top guys get paid and then everyone else gets what’s left over.

“The salary cap doesn’t help players at any level. … Doesn’t help the middle-class players. They get screwed the most in these systems. … And once you’re in that system, the history is that it always becomes worse and worse for players over time.

“We can make improvements for players at every level, in many ways, without going down the road of something that this union has fought against for literal generations.’’

And once again, the union plans to resist any attempt by MLB to eliminate salary arbitration and have it replaced by a statistical system based on pure numbers. Certainly, Detroit Tigers two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal doesn’t win a landmark $32 million arbitration case if the arbitration system is based on analytics.

“Any attempts to eliminate it are certainly going to be viewed with a negative light,’’ Meyer said, “and they have been in the past.’’

Meyer, who still has to meet with 27 more baseball teams in the next three weeks, will attend the World Baseball Classic in place of Clark, and will work on quickly developing relationships with players and agents, which was Clark’s forte.

“Tony has unmatched relationships that he had built as a player, a leader,’’ Meyer said. “Tony had unique skills. We’re going to miss certain aspects of that for sure.

“But I think we are in a very good place in terms of doing everything we can to make sure players are in a very good place.’’

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MILAN — Alysa Liu brought down the house, winning an Olympic gold medal with her free skate Thursday at the 2026 Winter Olympics and becoming the first American woman to win an individual figure skating Olympic medal in two decades.

‘I can’t process this, there’s no way,’ Liu said on the broadcast as she walked into the tunnel after being announced as the new Olympic champion.

From start to finish, Liu beamed while she soared across the ice. The crowd inside Milano Figure Skating Arena went absolutely wild when the music ended, the air electric at what they’d just witnessed. Liu skipped off the ice and into the arms of her coaches, jumping up and down.

She earned a season-best 150.20 for a total score of 226.79. Sasha Cohen was the last U.S. woman to win an individual Olympic medal, taking silver in 2006.

Three-time world champion Kaori Sakamoto of Japan took silver with a clean performance that earned her a 147.67 for a total of 224.90. She and Liu embraced for a long hug while Sakamoto waited for her score.

The bronze medal went to Japan’s 17-year-old Ami Nakai, who was in first after the short program and completed a technical program that included a triple Axel. Japan’s Mona Chiba was fourth with a 217.88.

Fellow U.S. skater Amber Glenn finished fifth, an incredible comeback after missing a jump in the short program to fall to 13th place entering the free skate. She nailed her triple Axel and skated to a 147.52 for 214.91 total. USA’s Isabeau Levito finished 12th with a 202.80.

Already with a team gold medal in hand at the 2026 Winter Olympics, Liu entered the free skate in third place, behind Nakai and Sakamoto. The 2025-26 season has been great for Liu in the free skate, with her improving her score each outing. In her first event, she scored a 128.22, and in the U.S. championships before the Olympics, she earned a 147.80.

That does come with a caveat. At nationals, Liu brought out her Lady Gaga medley, but went back to her ‘MacArthur Park Suite” program for the Olympics. The last time she used it, she scored a 146.70 at the Grand Prix Finals, which she won.

Liu also changed up her outfit for the free skate. At nationals she wore a glittery silver costume, but skated onto the ice in solid gold for the Olympics finale. As she stepped onto the podium, she held her hands out for Nakai and Sakamoto, the three competitors connected briefly before Liu jumped up and down on the top step while they hoisted the American and Japanese flags.

All season, Liu has been doing things her way. She returned to figure skating after two years away with a new manager, control over her music, routines and costumes. She repeatedly shot down questions about what it would mean to win a medal, saying that’s not why she’s here. She didn’t need to win or to beat the Japanese to feel successful, and with that mentality she skated with more freedom and flare than anyone else.

Watch Olympics figure skating on Peacock

When does Alysa Liu skate next?

The 20-year-old will take the ice with figure skating’s other biggest stars for the Exhibition Gala on Saturday.

Alysa Liu free skate elements

Here are the planned elements in Liu’s long program.

  • Triple flip
  • Triple Lutz + triple toeloop
  • Triple Salchow
  • Change foot combination spin
  • Triple loop
  • Fly camel spin
  • Triple Lutz + double Axel + double toeloop + sequence
  • Triple flip + double toeloop
  • Double Axel
  • Step sequence
  • Choreo sequence
  • Layback spin

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This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The two-time Olympian followed up her stunning short program performance from earlier in the week with another phenomenal performance in the free skate on Thursday, Feb. 19 inside the Milano Skating Stadium. She received a plethora of applause from those inside the arena as she won her second Olympic gold medal of the 2026 Winter Games.

Not only was it another stunning performance from Liu, but it was also one that spoke volumes off the ice, as it comes two years after she announced a comeback to figure skating following a two-year break after the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics.

It was also a historic moment for Liu when she stepped onto the podium, as she was the first U.S. woman to win an individual Olympic medal in figure skating since 2006, when Sasha Cohen took home silver at the Turin Winter Games. It is also the first individual Olympic gold medal for a U.S. woman since Sarah Hughes’ gold at the 2002 Salt Lake City Winter Games.

‘I can’t process this, there’s no way,’ Liu said on the broadcast as she walked into the tunnel after being announced as the new Olympic champion.

Given her comeback and the back-to-back performances she gave in Milan, Liu received quite the positive reaction and congratulatory messages on social media. She’ll return to the United States with two Olympic gold medals, as Team USA won back-to-back gold medals in the team event earlier in the Winter Olympics.

Social media reacts to Alysa Liu’s Olympic gold medal win

Here’s a snippet of those reactions following Liu’s free skate performance that helped win her an Olympic gold medal:

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

MILAN — Alysa Liu took her place on the top step of the Olympic podium and threw both hands in the air.

The U.S. figure skater who won her first national title at 13 years old, walked away from the sport at 16, came back at 18, became world champion at 19 was now an Olympic gold medalist at 20, the first American woman to capture individual gold since Sarah Hughes in 2002.

‘I literally can’t process this,’ she said shortly after winning.

Liu, who remains unapologetically herself, took a victory lap around around the Milano Ice Skating Arena, gold medal around her neck and an American flag draped over her shoulders.

She posed for photos, she bit her gold medal, she showed off her smiley frenulum piercing. She had just brought down the house with her electric free skate, the crowd leaping to its feet and the performance rocketing her into first from third place after her beautiful short program two days prior. She skated with pure joy, a wide smile on her face her whole program.

‘The feelings I felt out there were calm, happy, and confident,’ she said after.

When she came off the ice, she looked at the broadcast camera and said, ‘That’s what I’m (expletive) talking about!’

Liu’s teammate Amber Glenn turned in a fantastic free skate of her own to finish in fifth after sitting in 13th following her painful short program, showing herself and everyone what she’s made of. ‘She killed it,’ Liu said of Glenn.

USA TODAY Sports is at Milano Ice Skating Arena to bring you all the live updates, reactions and highlights.

Alysa Liu’s free skate

Alysa Liu absolutely rocked it with her long program performance, scoring a season-best 150.20 to total 226.79 points.

Amber Glenn free skate

Two days after a painful short program, Amber Glenn took the ice again here at the Milano Ice Skating Arena.

Glenn, the 26-year-old American at her first Games, said entering the night she wanted to recapture the joy of skating, to truly enjoy and soak up the experience here, something that has been a lifelong dream.

“No matter how the elements go today, I want to remember that I never even thought that I’d get here so that, in itself, is an accomplishment, and doing it as my authentic self and standing for what I believe in,’ Glenn, who was in 13th place after the short program, told NBC before her performance.

She did that in her free skate. She opened with a spectacular with a triple Axel that reached incredible height and was simply a show of industrial strengh. The execution earned her 10.40 points, 0.34 higher than her short program triple Axel. When she finished, she gave her signature fist pump, the crowd showering stuffies onto the ice and cheers onto her. She scored a 147.52 to finish with a total of 214.91.

In the Kiss-and-Cry section while awaiting her scores, she could be heard saying: ‘I’m at the Olympics. I didn’t fall. I didn’t fall at the Olympics.’

Amber Glenn, Alysa Liu on their friendship

USA TODAY Sports’ Jordan Mendoza spoke to Amber Glenn and Alysa Liu on the tight friendship they have formed. Here’s what they said.

What Liu said about Glenn: ‘She’s just such a big sister to me. The idea that we compete against each other, it’s so weird to me. I really just see her as one of my friends and truly one of my teammates. I don’t know, doing things with her is really fun.’

When Glenn said about Liu: ‘It’s been great to have someone that has such a positive outlook on skating and on her career around me. And then on the flip side, I have an extra pair of tights if she rips them and doesn’t have a backup, or I have the schedule ready because she doesn’t have it.’

Women’s figure skating finals Olympics live results

Here are the standings for the women’s figure skating competition at the 2026 Winter Games.

  1. Alysa Liu (USA): 226.79 total score, 150.20 free skate score, 76.59 short program score.
  2. Kaori Sakamoto (Japan): 224.90 total score, 147.67 free skate score, 77.23 short program score.
  3. Ami Nakai (Japan): 219.16 total score, 140.45 free skate score, 78.71 short program score.
  4. Mone Chiba (Japan): 217.88 total score, 143.88 free skate score, 74.00 short program score.
  5. Amber Glenn (USA): 214.91 total score, 147.52 free skate score, 67.39 short program score.
  6. Adeliia Petrosian (Neutral Athlete): 214.53 total score, 141.64 free skate score, 72.89 short program score.
  7. Niina Petrokina (Estonia): 210.82 total score, 141.19 free skate score, 69.63 short program score.
  8. Haein Lee (Korea): 210.56 total score, 140.49 free skate score, 70.07 short program score.
  9. Anastasiia Gubanova (Georgia): 209.99 total score, 138.22 free skate score, 71.77 short program score.
  10. Sofia Samodelkina (Kazakhstan): 207.46 total score, 138.99 free skate score, 68.47 short program score.
  11. Jia Shin (Korea): 206.68 total score, 141.02 free skate score, 65.66 short program score.
  12. Isabeau Levito (USA): 202.80 total score, 131.96 free skate score, 70.84 short program score.
  13. Lara Naki Gutmann (Italy): 195.75 total score, 134.19 free skate score, 61.56 short program score.
  14. Loena Hendrickx (Belgium): 199.65 total score, 128.72 free skate score, 70.93 short program score.
  15. Nina Pinzarrone (Belgium): 200.30 total score, 131.33 free skate score, 68.97 short program score.
  16. Iida Karhunen (Finland): 192.79 total score, 127.73 free skate score, 65.06 short program score.
  17. Julia Sauter (Romania): 190.93 total score, 127.80 free skate score, 63.13 short program score.
  18. Olga Mikutina (Austria): 185.59 total score, 123.87 free skate score, 61.72 short program score.
  19. Ruiyang Zhang (China): 178.03 total score, 118.65 free skate score, 59.38, short program score.
  20. Ekaterina Kurakova (Poland): 173.37 total score, 113.23 free skate score, 60.14 short program score.
  21. Livia Kaiser (Switzerland): 171.52 total score, 115.83 free skate score, 55.69 short program score.
  22. Lorine Schild (France): 167.08 total score, 111.45 free skate score, 55.63 short program score.
  23. Kimmy Repond (Switzerland): 159.54 total score, 100.34 free skate score, 59.20 short program score.
  24. Mariia Seniuk (Israel): 152.61 total score, 94.00 free skate score, 58.61 short program score.

Women’s figure skating Olympics winners list

Here is who has medaled in women’s singles figure skating over the last four decades.

  • 2026: Alysa Liu (USA), Kaori Sakamoto (Japan), Ami Nakai (Japan)
  • 2022: ROC’s Anna Shcherbakova (gold), ROC’s Aleksandra Trusova (silver), Japan’s Kaori Sakamoto (bronze)
  • 2018: ROC’s Alina Zagitova (gold), ROC’s Yevgeniya Medvedeva (silver), Canada’s Kaetlyn Osmond (bronze)
  • 2014: Russia’s Adelina Sotnikova (gold), Korea’s Yu-Na Kim (silver), Italy’s Carolina Kostner (bronze)
  • 2010: Korea’s Yu-Na Kim (gold), Japan’s Mao Asada (silver), Canada’s Joannie Rochette (bronze)
  • 2006: Japan’s Shizuka Arakawa (gold), USA’s Sasha Cohen (silver), Russia’s Irina Slutskaya (bronze)
  • 2002: USA’s Sarah Hughes (gold), Russia’s Irina Slutskaya (silver), USA’s Michelle Kwan (bronze)
  • 1998: USA’s Tara Lipinski (gold), USA’s Michelle Kwan (silver), China’s Chen Lu (bronze)
  • 1994: Ukraine’s Oksana Baiul (gold), USA’s Nancy Kerrigan (silver), China’s Chen Lu (bronze)
  • 1992: USA’s Kristi Yamaguchi (gold), Japan’s Midori Ito (silver), USA’s Nancy Kerrigan (bronze)
  • 1988: East Germany’s Katarina Witt (gold), Canada’s Elizabeth Manley (silver), USA’s Debi Thomas (bronze)
  • 1984: East Germany’s Katarina Witt (gold), USA’s Rosalynn Sumners (silver), USSR’s Kira Ivanova (bronze)

How is figure skating scored?

A figure skating routine is made up of two scores: Technical elements score and program components score. The technical elements score is exactly what it sounds like: It’s for the jumps, spins and step sequences in a performance. The program components score is made of up composition, presentation and skating skills.

Figure skating jump types

  • Toe jump: A skater drives the toe pick of their non-takeoff foot into the ice to launch themselves into the air and generate momentum into the jump.
    • Toe loop: A skater takes off backward and lands on the same back edge of their blade.
    • Lutz: A skater moving backward jumps off the back outside edge of their skate and uses the toe-pick of their other skate to catapult into the air in the opposite direction and lands on the back outside edge of the picking leg.
    • Flip: A skater launches off the back inside edge of one skate and lands on the back outside edge of the other skate.
  • Edge jump: A skater takes off not with their toe pick but off the edge of their skate.
    • Salchow: A skater launches off the back inside edge of one skate and lands on the back outside edge of their other skate.
    • Axel: The only forward-facing jump, a skater lands on the back outside edge of their non-takeoff foot while traveling backward. The axel is the hardest jump because of the extra half-revolution that comes with a forward takeoff and a backward landing.
    • Loop: The skater jumps off a back outside edge of their skate and lands on the same edge.
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MILAN The U.S. women’s national hockey team is golden once again. 

Team USA has appeared in all but one gold medal match since women’s hockey made its Olympic debut at the 1998 Nagano Games — each time facing off against the Canadians — but the Americans have only walked away with two gold medals. Make that three.

Team USA defeated Canada 2-1 in overtime at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Thursday, Feb. 19 to capture gold, marking the Americans’ first Olympic gold medal since the 2018 Pyeongchang Games, which they won in a shootout.

This squad, which Hilary Knight dubbed ‘the best U.S. hockey team I’ve ever been a part of,’ went undefeated on its run to the 20026 gold medal, matching the 1998 U.S. Olympic champions.

The Americans trailed much of the contest, before Hilary Knight scored an equalizer with less than three minutes remaining in regulation to send the game to overtime. Megan Keller’s sudden-death goal in overtime clinched the win.

‘When Meg (Keller) pulled her move, I knew we had it immediately,’ said Knight.

The Americans shut out the Canadians 5-0 in the preliminary round on Feb. 10, but Thursday’s gold-medal match was a nail biter that seemed destined to end in a Canadian celebration until Knight’s heroics.

‘The greatest rivalry in all sport for that reason, every game is tight,’ said Canadian defender Renata Fast, who assisted on Canada’s lone goal. ‘We knew that coming in every single battle, every single play is so important because the game is that close against this matchup. So this is the exact game we expected today, and obviously we just didn’t come out the way we wanted to.’

Canada’s Laura Stacey added, ‘We were two minutes and 20 something seconds away from being gold medalists, but sports and hockey is not easy, and I think it’s heartbreaking.’

The gold-medal victory caps off Knight’s prolific Olympic career with her second gold and fifth overall medal. Knight now holds the U.S. Olympic hockey record for the most overall medals and gold medals won. She also set the all-time points and goals record. 

Kendall Coyne Schofield called Knight’s game-tying goal ‘poetic.’

USA TODAY Sports is in Milan for the 2026 Winter Olympics and provided live coverage of the gold medal match. Scroll below for all the highlights:

Hilary Knight more nervous about proposal than game

The U.S. women’s national hockey team captured gold over Canada in a dramatic overtime victory, but that wasn’t the most nerve-wracking part of Hilary Knight’s week.

‘I was more nervous for the proposal than I was for the gold medal game,’ Knight said after the gold-medal win.

The five-time Olympian proposed to U.S. speed skater Brittany Bowe one day before the U.S. faced Canada in the women’s hockey final. Knight said her plan to propose was making her so anxious that she ultimately decided to pull the trigger because her “legs felt like Jello” throughout the tournament.

‘Call me crazy, but doing it before a gold medal game, it just seemed fitting for us,” said Knight, who scored a U.S. record-setting goal that forced overtime in the USA’s win.

USA’s Megan Keller ‘lost for words’ after overtime goal

Megan Keller threw her arms in the air and threw her equipment on the ice as teammates mobbed her.

She had just scored a golden goal. Keller took a pass from Taylor Heise in overtime, dangled around defender Claire Thompson and fired a shot that slipped through the pads of Ann-Renee Desbiens to give USA a 2-1 victory over Canada.

‘I’m lost for words,’ Keller said. ‘This is an incredible feeling. I love these girls so much. This group deserves it. Just the effort and the faith that we kept through this four-year journey is something very special. We worked so hard for the past four years. We love each other in that locker room. Just a really special group and just couldn’t be happier for us.’

Team USA receives their Olympic women’s hockey gold medals

At a medal ceremony that also featured silver medalists Canada and bronze medalists Switzerland, Team USA received their gold medas on the ice at the Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena in Milan.

Watch: Megan Keller’s game-winning overtime goal

Megan Keller broke several ankles of Canada’s defense for a chip shot into the back of the net just over four minutes into overtime inside the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on Thursday, Feb. 19 to give the United States the 2-1 gold medal win at the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics.

Olympic overtime rules

If the teams are tied after 60 minutes in the gold-medal game, teams play 20-minute 3-on-3 overtime periods, separated by 15-minute intermissions, until someone scores. Teams don’t change sides for the first overtime but do for subsequent overtimes.

USA vs Canada headed to overtime

USA goal: Hilary Knight sets record

Five-time Olympian Hilary Knight kept America’s gold-medal dreams alive with a goal at the 57:56 mark to tie it up, 1-1. With the goal, Knight becomes the U.S. all-time Olympic goals (15) and points leader (33). Laila Edwards and Megan Keller were credited with assists.

Canada power play

Team USA’s Britta Curl-Salemme was called for boarding after Canada’s Erin Ambrose went down hard. Ambrose immediately went back to the locker room after being assisted off the ice. The call was downgraded to a minor penalty after review.

End of 2nd period: Canada 1, USA 0

Team USA is in uncharted territory. The Canadians have a 1-0 lead after Kristin O’Neill scored a shorthanded goal. It marks the first time USA has trailed during the 2026 Winter Olympics. The last time an opponent scored against the Americans was 8:37 into the second period of their Olympic opener vs. Czechia on Feb. 5. Canada has a slight edge with 21 shots on goal, compared to 20 for the U.S.

Brittany Bowe in the building

Sixteen thousand fans packed into the Milano Santa Giulia Ice Hockey Arena Thursday, Feb. 19 to witness the women’s hockey gold-medal game between longtime rivals USA and Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

The crowd included U.S. hockey star Hilary Knight’s new fiancée — U.S. speed-skater Brittany Bowe.

Bowe was spotted in a Team USA jersey on the TV broadcast Thursday, one day after Knight got down on one knee and proposed to her following a morning coffee run. The couple announced their engagement on Instagram on Feb. 18. It marked a full circle moment for Knight and Bowe, who first met at the 2022 Beijing Winter Games. Bowe is set to compete in the women’s speed skating 1500-meter race Friday, Feb. 20.

Canada goal: Kristin O’Neill scores

Kristin O’Neill scored her third goal of the 2026 Olympics to give the Canadians a 1-0 lead over Team USA. The shorthanded goal was assisted by Laura Stacey and Renata Fast at the 20:54 mark. It marks the first time USA has trailed in the entire tournament.

End of 1st period: USA 0, Canada 0

We’re all tied after one period.Team USA entered Thursday’s gold-medal match with 13 total penalties through six games, the second fewest among the field of 10 teams. The Americans are already up to two penalties in the first period, including a call for too many players on the ice that possibly signals some nerves and early game jitters among the 12 first-time Olympians. The U.S. women have been on defense a majority of the first period as a result and were outshot 8-6 by Canada, but Team USA will enter the second period on a power play.

Aerin Frankel has been solid in front of the net. She made Olympic history as the first goalkeeper to record three shutouts following a 5-0 semifinal win over Sweden.

USA power play

Now the Americans have the advantage. Canada’s Ella Shelton was called for hooking, setting up USA’s first power play of the night.

Canada power play

The U.S. women racked up another penalty, this time a tripping call on Joy Dunne. Despite being at a disadvantage, USA’s Hayley Scamurra broke off toward the Canadian goal and nearly got a shot on goal. The Americans killed off the power play once again.

Canada power play

Team USA picked up the first penalty of the night for too many players on the ice, giving the Canadians a power play. Abbey Murphy served the penalty. After the U.S. women killed off the power play, chants of ‘U-S-A!’ rang out. Game remains scoreless in the first period.

Game underway

USA’s Aerin Frankel vs. Canada’s Ann-Renee Desbiens in net.

Two veterans meet in gold-medal match

Five-time Olympian Hilary Knight said she’s looking forward to facing off against fellow veteran Marie-Philip Poulin at the Games one more time after previously announcing her retirement from Olympic competition.

‘You have two great players duelling it out on the world stage. One is from Canada and one is from America,’ said Knight, who recently proposed to girlfriend, U.S. speed skater Brittany Bowe. Poulin added, ‘I have played against (Knight) my whole career. It is always a battle. Both of us are hungry. We want it again.’

Team USA on win streak

Entering Thursday, the U.S. women have won seven consecutive games against Canada, dating back to the 2025 IIHF Women’s World Championship, where the Americans won 4-3 in overtime. Team USA swept Canada in the 2025 Rivalry Series for the first time in tournament history and shut out Canada 5-0 during the preliminary round, marking the first time the Canadian women haven’t got on the score sheet in Olympic history.

What time is USA women’s hockey vs. Canada today?

  • Date: Thursday, Feb. 19
  • Time: 1:10 p.m. ET (7:10 p.m. local)
  • Location: Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena (Milan)

Puck drop between the U.S. women’s hockey team and Canada is set for 1:10 p.m. ET on Thursday, Feb. 19 from Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena in Milan.

Stream the 2026 Winter Olympics on Peacock

Where to watch USA women’s hockey vs Canada gold-medal game

  • TV channel: USA Network
  • Streaming options: NBCOlympics.com | NBC Olympic App | Peacock

USA Network will broadcast Thursday’s gold-medal game between U.S. women’s and Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Is there a live stream of the Olympic women’s gold medal game?

Streaming options for the game include NBCOlympics.com and the NBC Olympic App (with a cable TV or satellite login). You can also stream the game on Peacock, NBC’s subscription streaming service.

Hilary Knight stats

The U.S. hockey captain and five-time Olympian is sitting on the doorstep of breaking two records. Most points by an American at the Olympics and most goals by an American at the Olympics. She is tied with Jenny Potter for most points (32), and in a three-way tie with Natalie Darwitz and Katie King for most goals (14).

Who won the Olympic women’s hockey bronze medal?

U.S. women’s hockey roster for 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics

Here is the full U.S. women’s hockey roster for the Milano Cortina Olympics:

  • Goaltenders: Ava McNaughton; Aerin Frankel; Gwyneth Philips.
  • Defenders: Lee Stecklein; Cayla Barnes; Caroline Harvey; Megan Keller; Rory Guilday; Haley Winn; Laila Edwards.
  • Forwards: Kirsten Simms; Kelly Pannek; Grace Zumwinkle; Hayley Scamurra; Britta Curl-Salemme; Hilary Knight; Tessa Janecke; Hannah Bilka; Joy Dunne; Alex Carpenter; Kendall Coyne Schofield; Taylor Heise; Abbey Murphy.

Reach USA TODAY National Women’s Sports Reporter Cydney Henderson at chenderson@gannett.com and follow her on X at @CydHenderson.

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Cade Cunningham had said he likes playing in Madison Square Garden. He wasn’t lying.

Cunningham, the All-Star Detroit Pistons guard who is inserting himself into the conversation for NBA Most Valuable Player, was stellar in a 42-point, 13-assist, 8-rebound Pistons victory Thursday, Feb. 19. And with that 126-111 win, Detroit has won all three of its matchups against the Knicks this season, giving the Pistons a massive edge in potential seeding, should the Eastern Conference tighten up.

Jalen Brunson led the Knicks with 33 points, 8 assists and 6 rebounds, but New York struggled with its perimeter shots all night long.

Scroll below for a recap and highlights from Detroit’s impressive win over the Knicks Thursday night:

Pistons vs. Knicks highlights

End Q4: Pistons 126, Knicks 111

It was too much Cade Cunningham, too big a deficit on the glass and too few 3-pointers for the New York Knicks.

And with that, the Knicks have been swept in three regular season games by the No. 1-seeded Pistons (41-13), establishing a clear pattern of dominance over New York (35-21).

Cunningham played masterfully, dropping 42 points, 13 assists and 8 rebounds in a complete performance that should elevate his Most Valuable Player candidacy. Cunningham was deliberate and decisive in his movements, as Cunningham went 17-of-34 from the floor, including 5-of-11 from 3-point range.

The Knicks lost the rebounding battle 53-48 and shot just 8-of-35 from beyond the arc.

Jalen Brunson led New York with 33 points, 8 assists and 6 rebounds.

Pistons open biggest lead of game

The Knicks will lose this game if they don’t turn things around — and quickly. Detroit has opened up a 16-point lead, its biggest of the game, early in the fourth, leading to a Mike Brown timeout.

The Pistons have launched a 7-2 run to open the period.

End Q3: Pistons 90, Knicks 79

Cade Cunningham is on an absolute heater.

Cunningham, the Pistons’ All-Star guard and MVP candidate, has 35 points and 9 assists through three quarters, as he’s carrying Detroit to another solid game against the Knicks.

Cunningham has played excellently in his career against the Knicks and in Madison Square Garden and Thursday night has been no different. Cunningham, who dropped 11 points in the third, is in complete control, getting to his spots and not forcing anything. And, when New York sends extra pressure toward him, Cunningham is finding open teammates.

The Knicks, meanwhile, cooled off after a hot start to the period. Karl-Anthony Towns scored 12 points in the period, but New York has not been able to catch fire from deep. The Knicks are 4-of-25 (16%) from 3-point range.

Knicks cut it to 4 behind KAT attack

Clearly, New York adjusted at the half to get the ball in the hands of Karl-Anthony Towns, who has 8 points through the first two-and-a-half minutes of the third quarter. More importantly for the Knicks, they’ve shaved 6 points off the deficit and trail 62-58.

End Q2: Pistons 58, Knicks 48

The Pistons may be missing their top two centers, All-Star Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart (both to suspension), but they’re taking it to the Knicks.

Detroit closed the second quarter on a 7-0 run to open a 10-point lead in Madison Square Garden. The Knicks committed far too many turnovers and continued to struggle with their perimeter shooting in the second; New York has now missed 16 consecutive 3 pointers after it made its first of the game and is shooting just 6.3% from beyond the arc.

Cade Cunningham is continuing to control the offense for Detroit. He’s pushing the ball out in transition, finding his spots and dishing passes to his teammates to the tune of 24 points and 4 assists on 9-of-19 shooting.

New York, meanwhile, will need to scheme ways for Karl-Anthony Towns to become more active and engaged on offense. Towns is just 1-of-3 for 2 points with 5 rebounds. Towns is having a tough time finding his spots and at times has appeared disengaged.

Knicks 3-point shooting woes continue

New York made its first 3 pointer of the game, just seconds into the night. Since then, the Knicks have missed 14 consecutive 3s to shoot just 7.1% from beyond the arc, midway through the second quarter.

Karl-Anthony Towns with a quiet quarter

The Knicks big man has faced criticism over the past several weeks for a lack of intensity and intentional play. Towns had just 1 shot attempt in the first quarter, though he did look to distribute with two assists.

Still, for the Knicks to be elite, they will need more offensive production out of Towns.

End Q1: Pistons 28, Knicks 26

The Pistons battled back.

Detroit clamped up its defense and pestered New York into contested shots, which led to chances for Cade Cunningham to operate the offense in open space. Cunningham was the catalyst for Detroit, dropping a game-high 14 points in the first quarter on 5-of-11 shooting, including 3-of-5 from beyond the arc.

That was the difference in the first quarter, as Detroit was able to hit its open 3s, while the Knicks struggled to find bottom on theirs; the Pistons converted 3 pointers at 40%, while New York went just 1-of-8 (12.5%) in the period.

Jalen Brunson led the way for New York with 9 points.

Late in the first, new acquisition Jeremy Sochan made his Knicks debut, after the team signed him following his buyout with the Spurs.

Knicks vs. Pistons is underway

Jalen Brunson laced his first shot post-All-Star break, a stepback 3, and the Pistons missed their first four shots of the game as we’re underway in the Garden.

Detroit has started just 1-of-8 from the field, as New York has opened an early 9-2 lead just minutes into the game.

Knicks vs. Pistons starting lineups

Detroit Pistons

  • Cade Cunningham
  • Duncan Robinson
  • Ausar Thompson
  • Tobias Harris
  • Paul Reed

New York Knicks

  • Jalen Brunson
  • OG Anunoby
  • Mikal Bridges
  • Josh Hart
  • Karl-Anthony Towns

Knicks vs. Pistons injury report

(Updated 5:00 p.m. ET)

Knicks: OG Anunoby (right toenail avulsion; probable), Miles McBride (pelvic, core muscle surgery; out), Pacome Dadiet (G League assignment; questionable), Trey Jemison III (G League – two-way; questionable), Dillon Jones (G League – two-way; questionable), Kevin McCullar Jr. (G League – two-way; questionable)

Pistons: Jalen Duren (league suspension; out), Isaiah Stewart (league suspension; out), Bobi Klintman (G League assignment; out), Wendell Moore Jr. (G League – two-way; out)

How to watch Pistons vs. Knicks: TV channel, live stream

  • Start time: 7:30 p.m. ET
  • Location: Madison Square Garden (New York)
  • TV Channel: MSG Networks
  • Live stream: Amazon Prime

Pistons vs. Knicks odds

  • Spread: Knicks by 4.5 (-110)
  • Over/Under: 222.5 (O/U -110)
  • Moneyline: Knicks -185

Knicks next five games

  • Feb. 21 vs. Houston Rockets
  • Feb. 22 at Chicago Bulls
  • Feb. 24 at Cleveland Cavaliers
  • Feb. 27 at Milwaukee Bucks
  • March 1 vs. San Antonio Spurs

Pistons next five games

  • Feb. 21 at Chicago Bulls
  • Feb. 23 vs. San Antonio Spurs
  • Feb. 25 vs. Oklahoma City Thunder
  • Feb. 27 vs. Cleveland Cavaliers
  • March 1 at Orlando Magic
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The Trump administration has repeatedly assigned additional job roles to Cabinet members and other officials, and one of his top health officials is the latest to begin pulling double duty for the president. 

On Wednesday, National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director Jay Bhattacharya became the latest Trump official assigned an additional role. The NIH chief and staunch COVID contrarian will temporarily run the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) until a new permanent director is appointed by President Donald Trump and subsequently confirmed by the Senate, while continuing to lead the NIH.

Bhattacharya’s move to the CDC followed the departure of Jim O’Neill, who was also deputy secretary of the Health and Human Services Department amid a broader restructuring of the Trump administration’s public health agencies. O’Neill is now reportedly expected to lead the National Science Foundation.

Fox News Digital looked back on the various Trump Cabinet members and officials wearing multiple hats as the president adjusts during the second year of his second term.

 

Dr. Jay Bhattacharya

A physician, former Stanford professor of medicine and senior fellow at the university’s Institute for Economic Policy Research, Bhattacharya was a leading voice during the COVID-19 pandemic against lockdown measures and vaccine mandates. 

He was one of the co-authors of the Great Barrington Declaration, a document published in October 2020 by a group of scientists advocating against widespread COVID lockdowns and promoting the efficacy of natural immunity for low-risk individuals as opposed to vaccination.

During Bhattacharya’s tenure, he has been forced to defend certain funding cuts tied to academic research and staffing. One of the core components Bhattacharya indicated that he wanted to pursue after his confirmation was to usher in a new age of ‘gold standard science.’

‘I think fundamentally what matters is do scientists have an idea that advances the scientific field they’re in?’ Bhattacharya said during his March confirmation testimony. ‘Do they have an idea that ends up addressing the health needs of Americans?’

Marco Rubio

Rubio and the Trump administration came under fire from Democrats for the secretary of state holding as many as four high-profile roles during the second Trump administration. As of today, he remains in two of those roles.

He was first confirmed as secretary of state hours after Trump was inaugurated, a role Rubio remains in today. 

About a month later, amid a massive reorganization at the U.S. Administration for International Development (USAID), Rubio was named director and held that role until handing it off a few months later.  

Around the same time, Rubio was tapped to be the acting archivist of the United States (NARA), a role he stopped serving in earlier this month.

Rubio does still serve as the interim national security advisor, a role he has held since May after the departure of Michael Waltz.   

‘There’s no way he can do that and do it well, especially since there’s such incompetence over at DOD with Pete Hegseth being secretary of defense and just the hollowing out of the top leadership,’ Illinois Democratic Sen. Tammy Duckworth said of Rubio’s multiple jobs. ‘There’s no way he can carry all that entire load on his own.’

‘I don’t know how anybody could do these two big jobs,’ Democratic Virginia Sen. Mark Warner added.

When asked about the trend of Trump officials wearing multiple work hats in May, the White House reflected in a comment to Fox News Digital on former President Joe Biden’s ‘disaster of a Cabinet.’ 

‘Democrats cheered on Joe Biden’s disaster of a Cabinet as it launched the botched Afghanistan withdrawal, opened the southern border to migrant criminals, weaponized the justice system against political opponents and more,’ White House spokesperson Anna Kelly told Fox News Digital in May. 

‘President Trump has filled his administration with many qualified, talented individuals he trusts to manage many responsibilities.’ 

The Trump administration has repeatedly brushed off concerns over Rubio holding multiple roles, most notably juggling both his State Department leadership and serving as acting national security advisor. Similarly, former President Richard Nixon in 1973 named National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger to simultaneously serve as Secretary of State.

 

‘You need a team player who is very honest with the president and the senior team, not someone trying to build an empire or wield a knife or drive their own agenda,’ an administration official told Politico. ‘He is singularly focused on delivering the president’s agenda.’ 

Despite Democratic rhetoric that Rubio was taking on too many roles, the former Florida senator helped oversee successful U.S. strikes on Iran in June, which destroyed a trio of nuclear sites and decimated the country’s efforts to advance its nuclear program.

Kash Patel

FBI Director Kash Patel, who railed against the ‘deep state’ and vowed to strip corruption from the federal law enforcement agency ahead of his confirmation, was briefly charged with overseeing the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) in February after the Biden-era director resigned in January 2025. 

Patel was later replaced by Secretary of the Army Daniel Driscoll as acting ATF director in a job change that was reported publicly in April. 

‘Director Kash Patel was briefly designated ATF director while awaiting Senate confirmations, a standard, short-term move. Dozens of similar redesignations have occurred across the federal government,’ the White House told Reuters in April. ‘Director Patel is now excelling in his role at the FBI and delivering outstanding results.’

Sean Duffy 

Duffy, a former Republican congressman from Wisconsin, was tapped to oversee the Department of Transportation and was confirmed by the Senate Jan. 28. Duffy has been forced to juggle a handful of crises related to tragic plane crashes, including the 2025 Potomac River midair collision and air traffic control issues that plagued New Jersey’s Liberty International Airport last year. 

In July, President Trump announced Duffy would also serve as interim chief of NASA. Duffy remained in that position until mid-December, when commercial astronaut Jared Isaacman took over.

Prior to Trump’s inauguration in January 2025, the president announced he would be nominating Isaacman but withdrew his nomination in May before the full Senate confirmed him. Trump said the decision followed a review of Isaacman’s ‘prior associations,’ pointing to money he has given to Democrats. 

However, Isaacman suggested at the time that the rescission of his nomination may have been due to his connections to Elon Musk, who was running the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) at the time. 

Duffy replaced Janet Petro, who had served as acting NASA administrator since Trump’s inauguration.

Daniel Driscoll 

Driscoll was sworn in as the 26th secretary of the Army in February. The secretary of the army is a senior-level civilian official charged with overseeing the management of the Army and also acts as an advisor to the secretary of defense in matters related to the Army. 

It was reported in April that Driscoll was named acting ATF director, replacing Patel in that role. 

‘Mr. Driscoll is responsible for the oversight of the agency’s mission to protect communities from violent criminals, criminal organizations, and the illegal trafficking of firearms, explosives, and contraband,’ his ATF biography states. ‘Under his leadership, the ATF works to enforce federal laws, ensure public safety, and provide critical support in the investigation of firearms-related crimes and domestic and international criminal enterprises,’

Ahead of Trump taking office, Republican representatives Eric Burlison of Missouri and Lauren Boebert of Colorado introduced legislation to abolish the ATF, saying the agency has worked to strip Second Amendment rights from U.S. citizens. 

The ATF has been tasked with assisting the Department of Homeland Security in its deportation efforts under the Trump administration. 

Driscoll remains listed as the agency’s acting director as of February 2026. 

Doug Collins 

Former Georgia Republican Rep. Doug Collins was sworn in as the Trump administration’s secretary of Veterans Affairs in February, a Cabinet-level position tasked with overseeing the department and its mission of providing health, education and financial benefits to military veterans. 

Days after his confirmation as VA secretary, Trump tapped Collins to temporarily lead two oversight agencies, the Office of Government Ethics and the Office of Special Counsel. 

The Office of Government Ethics is charged with overseeing the executive branch’s ethics program, including setting ethics standards for the government and monitoring ethics compliance across federal agencies and departments. 

The Office of Special Counsel is charged with overseeing and protecting the federal government’s merit system, most notably ensuring federal whistleblowers don’t face retaliation for sounding the alarm on an issue they’ve experienced. The office also has an established secure channel to allow federal employees to blow the whistle on alleged wrongdoing. 

The Office of Special Counsel also enforces the Hatch Act, which bans executive branch staffers, except the president and vice president, from engaging in certain forms of political activity

Jamieson Greer

Trump’s trade representative, Jamieson Greer, has also been tapped for multiple roles within the administration, in addition to helping lead the administration’s tariff negotiations to bring parity to the chronic U.S. trade deficit with other nations. 

Greer took on Collins’ roles as acting director of the Office of Government Ethics and as acting special counsel of the Office of Special Counsel April 1. 

Trump nominated conservative attorney Paul Ingrassia to lead the Office of Special Counsel in May, but he subsequently withdrew his nomination amid concerns about his rhetoric and other accusations the young conservative was facing at the time.  

Russell Vought 

Trump named his former director of the Office of Management and Budget during his first administration, Russell Vought, to the same role in his second administration. Vought was confirmed as the federal government’s budget chief in February. 

Days later, Vought was also named the acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), a position he still holds.

 

The CFPB is an independent government agency charged with protecting consumers from unfair financial practices in the private sector. It was created in 2010 under the Obama administration after the financial crash in 2008. Democratic Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren originally proposed and advocated for the creation of the agency.

The CFPB came under fierce investigation from the Department of Government Efficiency in February, with mass terminations rocking the agency before the reduction in force initiative was tied up in court. 

Ric Grenell 

President Donald Trump’s former ambassador to Germany and acting director of national intelligence during his first term, a pair of roles held at separate times in the first administration, currently serves as president of the Kennedy Center and special presidential envoy for special missions of the United States. 

The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts serves as the national cultural center of the U.S. Trump notably serves as the center’s chairman, and Grenell said the center will see a ‘golden age’ of the arts during Trump’s second administration through productions and concerts that Americans actually want to see after years of the performing arts center running in the red. 

Trump named Grenell his special presidential envoy for special missions to the United States in December 2024 before his inauguration, saying Grenell will ‘work in some of the hottest spots around the world, including Venezuela and North Korea.’

In this role, Grenell helped lead the administration through its response to the wildfires that tore through Southern California in the last days of the Biden administration through the beginning days of the Trump administration. 

Fox News Digital’s Jasmine Baehr contributed to this report. 

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